Publications & Reports
-
Water shutoffs, social reproduction, and the carceral state
Authors: Katie Meehan
Water service shutoffs are cast as a vital ‘tool’ for water utility governance in the USA; yet their growing use raises questions about the welfare state and life-affirming infrastructure provision. This article uses water shutoffs—arguably the evictions of the water world—as a prism to examine the extension of carceral power in the sphere of social reproduction. In analyzing shutoff practices in US cities, the article finds that household water access is increasingly weaponized as a ‘police structure’ to preserve a model of debt-driven water management, in ways that also produce a spatial and racial division of nature.
-
Plumbing poverty in US cities: A report on gaps and trends in household water access, 2000 to 2017
Authors: Katie Meehan | Jason R. Jurjevich | Alison Griswold | Nicholas M.J.W. Chun | Justin Sherrill
An open-access research report on emerging trends and persistent gaps in household water access in 15 major US metros from 2000 to 2017. The study identified racialized disparities, compared trends between cities over two decades, and pointed to worsening conditions for urban dwellers, especially renters. Profiled three case studies: San Francisco, CA, Phoenix, AZ, and Milwaukee, WI.
-
Geographies of insecure water access and the housing-water nexus in US cities
Authors: Katie Meehan | Jason R. Jurjevich | Nicholas M.J.W. Chun | Justin Sherrill
Published in PNAS, we introduced the ‘housing-water nexus’ in the first study of household water access in the 50 largest US cities. In 2017, households without running water were more likely to be headed by people of color, earn lower incomes, rent their residence, and pay a higher share of income toward housing costs. We established that gaps in urban water provision are underpinned by precarious housing conditions and systemic racial inequality.
-
Plumbing poverty: Mapping hot spots of racial and geographic inequality in US household water insecurity
Authors: Shiloh Deitz | Katie Meehan
The flagship article of the Plumbing Poverty project, published in the Annals of the American Association of Geographers. We introduced the concept and methodology of plumbing poverty to examine the intersectional nature of infrastructure, space, and social inequality. In analyzing millions of household microdata records, we identified hot spots of plumbing poverty across the USA, tracked its social and spatial variance, and exposed its racialized nature.